“Failed Development” and Rural Revolution in Nepal
Transcript of “Failed Development” and Rural Revolution in Nepal
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Failed Development and RuralRevolution in Nepal: RethinkingSubaltern Consciousness and
Womens EmpowermentLauren Leve
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Abstract
Rural womens active support for the decade-long Maoist insurrection in Nepal has
captured the attention of academics, military strategists, and the development
industry. This essay considers two theories that have been proposed to account for
this phenomenon. The failed development hypothesis suggests that popular dis-
content with the government is the result of uneven, incomplete, or poorly execut-
ed development efforts and recommends more and better aid as the route to peace.In contrast, the conscientization model proposes that, at least in some cases,
womens politicization may be the unexpected result of successful development pro-
grams that aimed to empower women by raising their consciousness of gender
and class-based oppression. Drawing on the testimonies of women who participat-
ed in such programs in Gorkha districta Maoist stronghold where women are
reported to have been especially activeI argue that both of these explanations
reflect assumptions about social subjectivity that are critically out of synch with the
realities of rural Nepal. Gorkhali womens support for the rebels embodies a pow-
erful critique of neoliberal democracy and the Nepal state, but one that is based
on morally-grounded ideas about social personhood in which self-realization is
bound up in mutual obligation and entails personal sacrificenot the culturally-
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disembedded valorizations of autonomy, agency, and choice that most models pre-
sume. Theorists of subaltern political consciousnessand of the relations between
development and violencemust engage with the gendered moral economies of
the people they aim to empower if they ultimately hope to promote sustainable
peace. [Keywords: empowerment, development, gender, violence, political con-
sciousness, resistance]
Humanity is a modernist figure; and this humanity has a generic face, a universal
shape. Humanitys face has been the face of a man.
Donna Haraway, 1992
If the question of female subaltern consciousness is a red herring, the question of
subaltern consciousness as such must be judged a red herring as well.
Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak, 1988
I am worried about my own country. In our country, nothing has happened
besides murders and killings. Our country is our home. If the country is destroyed,
our village is disturbed, and if the village is disturbed, our home is disturbed, andif our home is disturbed, then were destroyed too.
Padam Kumari Gorkha
On February 13, 1996, a homemade bomb exploded at the agricultural
development bank in rural Gorkha district, Nepal.1 The blast damaged
the building and its furniture; more importantly, the attack destroyed all
records of the banks agricultural loans. Within hours, near simultaneous
attacks took place at police posts in Rolpa and Rukum districts, further west.Together, these assaults announced the commencement of a decade long
armed Maoist revolt against the government of Nepal and what their instiga-
tors defined as 200 plus years of feudal exploitation of Nepals peasantry, the
beginning of thejana yuddhaor Peoples War.
The onset of the insurrection took most Nepalis by surprise.2 Initially dis-
missed by the political center as an aberrant phenomenon confined mainly to
a few areas in the far Western region, the movement grew by leaps and
bounds; less than six years later it had penetrated almost all of Nepals 75 dis-
tricts and by 2006, 70% of the countryside was said to be under Maoist control.
As the scale of the conflict has grown, so too did its casualties. By 2006, more
than 13,000 people had been killed in connection with the uprising and state
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efforts to suppress it. Rape, kidnapping, and disappearances have become
commonplace and both the Maoists and the State have been accused of
human rights abuses. Schools, health posts, and development projects have
been disrupted or forced to close all over the country, and infrastructure suchas airstrips, bridges, and telephone lines have been destroyed. As a result of all
this, as many as 200,000 people have fled their rural homes, which are now
sites of violent struggle, seeking work abroad or migrating to Nepali cities as
internal refugees (IDPs).3 Today, it is brutally clear that the insurrection and its
attendant violence, insecurity, and infrastructural destruction have threat-
enedand in many cases, destroyedmillions of rural and urban peoples
abilities sustain themselves and pursue their social lives and livelihoods.
The speed and intensity with which the insurgency gained support in the
countryside has inspired an abundant literature on rural life and the roots of
the rebellion.4 Almost immediately, four factors were identified as motivating
popular support: (1) popular disillusionment with the failure of the Nepal state
to deliver the expected democratization of local social relations and political
authority after the victory of the first jana andolan (Peoples Movement) and
the establishment of multi-party democracy in 1990; (2) continuing poverty
and a widening gap between rural and urban quality of life despite fourdecades of intensive development; (3) widespread frustration with corruption
at all levels of government; and (4) a backlash against the brutality of police,
and later army, counter-insurgency campaigns.
The first three of these have been glossed as related elements of a broad,
singularly encompassing cause: that of failed or incomplete development.
Pointing to the fact that the districts at the heart of the insurrection, Rolpa
and Rukum, were among the poorest in Nepal, many analysts have explained
the revolt as the result of rising expectations combined with continued oreven increasing deprivation.5 Despite the fact that millions of dollars had
been devoted to rural development, uneven distribution of aid benefits and
political voice between urban centers and rural hinterlands, between rural
districts, and between classes of rural and urban people themselves was rec-
ognized as a development failure and a threat to the state. The most common
prescription for this maladyadvanced at academic conferences, NGO semi-
nars, political summits, and in a host of books, articles and working papers on
the topicwas more and better development aid.
As we will see, all of these factors are important. Yet, they are all gender
blinda remarkable oversight given womens extraordinary visibility in the
revolt. One of the most commented on features of the rebellion is the unprece-
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dented degree of womens participation, and the rebels own emphasis on
womens liberation has been widely discussed.6 One third of all foot soldiers in
Maoist strongholds are said to be women. Women occupy positions of leader-
ship throughout the Maoist hierarchy, participate actively in village defensegroups, and work as couriers and guides. It is reported that some of the most
violent actions against local tyrants are associated with all women-guerilla
groups (Gautam, Banskota, and Manchanda 2001:236-7). Indeed, journalist-
scholar and human rights activist Rita Manchanda has suggested that Gorkhali
womens active support for the Maoists reflects not the absence or failure of
development activities there, but, to the contrary, their surprising success. In an
essay entitled Empowerment With a Twist (1999), she proposes that, at least in
Gorkha district, the insurrection has benefited from two decades of develop-
ment work. In particular, she and her colleagues Shoba Gautam and Amrita
Banskota propose that womens presence among the rebels has been boosted
by the adult womens literacy programs run by an American INGO:
In Gorkha district, it is literate women and men who are joining the strug-
gle. Ironically, it is the success of the adult literacy campaign which has
paved the way for women to become active in the public life of the com-munity, for girls to go to schools and for girls politicized in school to be
drawn into the armed struggle. (Gautam, Banskota, and Manchanda 2001)
By this theory, far from discouraging violence, development activities have
actually helped catalyze it: Literacy campaignsdesigned to promote the
empowerment of women inadvertently encouraged many conscientised
young women to choose subsequent empowerment through armed struggle
(Gautam, Banskota, and Manchanda 2003:121).7
The contrast between this hypothesis and the failed development account
raises questions about the relationship between development and rural insur-
rection in Nepal, especially given the industrys concern to promote participa-
tion and empowerment. Does popular support for the rebellion reflect the
incompleteness or failure of the development enterprise, or is it an inadvertent
result? What is empowerment and how is it related to democracyand/or
violent resistance to the developmental state? Are women different types of
social actors than men? What are the relations betweenand/or results of
transformations in political, developmental, or gendered consciousness? As we
will see, addressing these questions requires ethnographic engagement with
development as both ideological practice and practical enterprise. It also
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demands a critical rethinking of conventional understandings of subaltern sub-
jectivity and its relation to oppositional political consciousness.
This study is focused on the same Gorkhali women Manchanda referred to
above, women who participated in an INGO-run rural womens literacy andempowerment program in the mid-nineteen eightiesand who are for the
most part actively sympathetic to the uprising now, even as they criticize the
violence and lament lives lived in fearand lives lost. It is important to note
at the outset that the women on whose experiences my reflections are based
are not official members of the rebel cadre. They have not left their homes
to join the Peoples Army in the forest; nor are they party activists or mem-
bers of local militia, on the whole. Yet, they support the rebels by feeding
them, housing them, and, most importantly, not informing the government
about their activities or whereabouts. As in other parts of the country, such
help can tax already stretched food supplies and inspire violent retribution
from military forces, so this intimate proximity is also a source of fear, which
is a reality that shaped all the communication on which this paper is based.8
But without their support, these women told me, the insurgents would be
lost. And as I have learned through my observations of daily life in this con-
flict zone, the notion that there are two distinct and opposed sides is most-ly an illusion anyway (Leve 2004).9
My approach reflects the difficulties of doing direct ethnography with the
Maoists themselves. It is also, however, a result of circumstance. I first learned
of Manchandas article when it was forwarded to me by the director of the
INGO she credited for helping to catalyze Gorkhali womens revolutionary con-
sciousness. A note attached concluded with the question: Interested?
Given my relationship to the program and its participants, it was hardly sur-
prising that the director thought I might be interested. At the point thatManchanda made her trip to Gorkha and published her article, Id known the
women from the program she was talking about for nine years and had pub-
lished two commissioned studies on the effects of the program, one specifical-
ly focused on the question of womens empowerment. My first research trip to
Gorkha was in 1991, at which time I did ethnographic interviews and organized
a quantitative survey of women who had taken part in the course in order to
understand the effects of the program five years after it was completed. On the
basis of this report, the INGO, which I will henceforth refer to as DFA
(Development for All),10 asked me to return in 1995-96 to do a 10-year retrospec-
tive evaluation. Womens empowerment was a particular concern in the devel-
opment world at that timeas well as a personal interest of mineso I cen-
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tered my next round of research on this. What all this meant when the director
contacted me was that I had a decade of longitudinal data on the effects of the
program on its participants as individuals and the community as a whole.
Plus, Id made friendsthe women Id stayed with and worked with whiledoing the research, field-based employees of DFA who helped me at every stage,
the teachers, keepers of tea-stalls and shopkeepers that Id interviewed or ban-
tered with on the path, and, of course, the women themselves, plus various of
their parents, husbands, brothers, sisters, mother-in-laws and children Id met
along the way. When I returned in early 2001 during a ceasefire, Gorkha was
officially classified as a severely affected area, and I wondered howand
whetherId be received. The fact that people remembered me and the rela-
tionships that DFA had built meant that I was welcomed, however, and I found
familiar faces willing to work with me again. Since then, Ive stayed with partic-
ipants and their families every time Ive returned to Gorkha and, when the war
made it impossible for me to go there myself, local women whod worked with
me in the pastincluding some who had learned to read in the program Ill be
discussingcontinued the interviewing for me. At those times, I also worked
with Gorkhali migrants to Kathmandu and met others in the district center.
This paper attempts to bring what I have learned from them to bear on thefailed development thesisand Manchandas ironic successful develop-
ment one. It seeks to understand participants understandings of develop-
ment and its relation to social and gender-justice, the forms of consciousness
that participants took from their experience of literacy study, and their rede-
ployment of these against the state in the context of changes in the material
realities and human expectations of men, women, and families in the region.
At end, we will see that while there is no single reason for the support
Gorkhali women feel for the insurrectionunderstandings of it and affinitiesfor it reflect multiple circumstances and subjectivitiesall their own stories,
reflections, and explanations presume a very different sort of self: a self that
is not, could not be, and does not wish to be purely autonomous in the way
most theories of rural empowerment presume, but rather defines itself by its
relationships and, especially, its commitments. This is a self which, as Bakhtin
might have put it, only exists at the point where it meets others. This insight
has implications for theoretical understandings of rural empowerment and
political radicalization, which in turn, has implications for imagining why
some people might wish to leave their homes and take up arms, and thus
what kind of human development projects are likely to support peace.
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Womens Empowerment in Gorkha District
The ancestral home of the Shah dynasty, Gorkha is probably the district with
the greatest name recognition beyond Kathmandu. Indeed, it was from a
palace that one literally passes on the way to the villages I will be describingthat Prithvinarayan Shah, 10th generation grandfather to the current king,
Gyanendra, set out with his armies to conquernationalists say unitethe
lands that collectively comprise the sovereign space of modern Nepal.11 As a
result of this privileged history, the district has assumed a pride of place in the
nationalist consciousness. Indeed it was one of the first regions targeted for
intensive development and Gorkha Bazaar remains one of the few district
centers in the mid-hills accessible by road. Nevertheless, the district has a
strong leftist past, was one of the early Maoist strongholds, and remains a
hotbed of insurrectionary support.
In the first eight years of the war, no fewer than 21 individuals from the
two Village Development Committees (VDCs) that I will collectively refer to as
Chorigaon left their homes to join the Maoists in the forests and under-
ground.12 By 2006, eleven people had been killed in the two VDCs by the state
security forces (all were civilians, of whom nine were local residents, includ-
ing three teenagers and two teachers), in addition to at least two others fromthe area who had joined the Peoples Army and died fighting elsewhere. For
their part, the Maoists had killed more than 40 police and army personnel
posted there, including the dramatic massacre of 23 soldiers in a single attack
on a police post. To get a sense of what these numbers mean in terms of the
experience of violence in everyday life, consider that all of this has taken
place in a community consisting of just 801 households spread out in an area
of less than ten square miles (25 square kilometers).13
Geographically, most of Chorigaon is laid out vertically: it is bordered onthree sides by riversand ranges up to about 1230 meters in altitude at its peak.
Socially, it comprises about eighteen ethnically-diverse settlements, all of which
are predominantly Hindu. The fastest way to reach there from Kathmandu is to
take a bus or other vehicle to the district center (approximately 190 km., a six
to eight hour ride), and then walk another six to nine hours on an unpaved path
down a river valley and back up the mountain and along the ridge on the other
side. A twisting road to a nearby village where the Maoists ransacked a small
DFA office in 199614 and which now hosts a military barracks, was constructed
sometime between 1996 and 2001. It remains unpaved, however, and is only
motorable in the dry season. A small part of one VDC became electrified in the
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mid-nineties; a telephone line that was also installed then has since been
destroyed in the war. What this means is little electricity, no reliable roads, and,
since many of the water taps that DFA installed in the eighties are no longer
functioning, women may walk an hour or more in the dry season to get drink-ing water an average of nine times per day.15
Despite this, Chorigaon is fairly well-off compared to other hill villages in
other parts of Nepal. DFAs early investments in schools, health, agriculture,
and microcredit programsand especially its commitment to employing
local people in the region, at its central offices, and, since leaving Gorkha, at
other project siteshas helped promote education, improve health and
nutrition, and elevate the standard of living in the area as a whole. Moreover,
its location, only a days walk from the road head and less than a day from
the capital by bus, makes it relatively accessible by rural Nepal standards. In
fact, little of the mid-hill region is electrified or has road access, despite the
fact that Nepal was 90% rural before the start of the war. Most families are
subsistence farmers: In 1983, when the literacy program began, 98% of
households owned land, although less than 55% were able to feed them-
selves from their land for more than 6 months in an average year.16 Neither
of these patterns has significantly changed, although cash needs haveincreased. Before the conflict began to force people out of the rural VDCs,
most households supplemented their agricultural production with salaries
and pensions earned through service in the British, Indian or Nepali armies,
through private employment in the district center, India or Kathmandu,
and/or by working others fields, portering or other kinds of day labor. Today,
locals estimate that almost every home has at least one member living full-
time outside of the village whose income is critical to sustaining the house-
hold. Migration for wage labor on this scale has grown up largely since theestablishment of democracy in 1990.
The history of womens development programming in the region dates to
1983 when DFA organized an evening literacy course for adults. Although the
class was technically open to both men and women, the organizers found that
womenfew of whom had attended school as childrenenrolled in the class
at a much higher rate. Nonformal adult education (NFE) was a relatively new
concept in Nepal at that point. The first NFE courses in that area had been
introduced just the previous year in a neighboring VDC. Yet the program rap-
idly proved to be a popular success. In 1983-84, 1052 people enrolled in 25
NFE courses in the two VDCs.17 87% of these participants were female. By the
end of the program in 1986-7, more than 1600 people had attended one or
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more of the literacy classes, and almost half of the participants had complet-
ed the three year curriculum. Given that the total population of adult women
(between 15 and 60) in Chorigaon in 1983 was about 1634, this means that
roughly two-thirds of the women in the two VDCs comprising Chorigaon par-ticipated in the NFE program.
A notable feature of these courses was their emancipatory intent. Most
womens literacy courses offered in Nepal today are six or nine months that
are treated primarily as a lead-in to income generation classes, microcredit
programs, or savings and loan groups. This reflects the current dominance of
neoliberal ideology in development planning, which posits the market as the
institution best suited to delivering overall social good and understands
womens empowerment as largely a matter of facilitating womens participa-
tion in cash-yielding forms of production and consumer life (cf. Feldman
1997; Fernando 1997; Karim 2001; Leve 2001; Leve and Karim 2001; Rankin
2001, 2004). In contrast, Development For Alls program in Chorigaon was a
three year course with a participatory goal. According to the agencys first for-
mal program evaluationwhich was written by two people who went on to
occupy the top two positions in the agency for many yearsits main intent in
teaching literacy and numeracy skills was to assist program participants inidentifying the problems faced by their families and communities and to
help them achieve greater self-confidence so they can shape their own envi-
ronment through development activities (Sob and Leslie 1988:3).
In prioritizing the idea of self-help and peoples participation in commu-
nity development projects18 the DFA program reflected fundamental ideals
associated with the community-based integrated rural development (CBIRD)
paradigm which was popular at that time. These ideals were also reflected in
its curriculum, Naya Goreto (New Path), an innovative pedagogical packagebased on the ideas of the radical Brazilian educator Paolo Freire as adapted
to Nepal by researchers at Tribhuvan Universitys CERID (the Center for
Educational Research, Innovation and Development) and the Boston-based
INGO World Education. 19 Inspired by the Freirean ideal of education as the
practice of freedom,20 Naya Goreto aimed to combine community develop-
ment, literacy learning and critical empowerment in a way that would trans-
form the consciousness of its participants. Freire believed that traditional
educational methods dehumanize the downtrodden by reinforcing their sense
of alienation and inadequacy (brought on by subjection to the hegemony of
the dominant classes). He designed his pedagogy to help the people he alter-
nately referred to as peasants and as the oppressed remake themselves as,
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literally, new men through a process of conscientizationa transforma-
tion whereby learners come to recognize their own value and knowledge and
thus, enter the historical process as responsible Subjects, build a qualitative-
ly new society, and become authentic and complete human beings(1970:18,140, 65, 29). Naya Goreto followed this lead in that, in addition to
providing information, the program was designed to inspire a critical dia-
logue that would help participants develop problem-solving skills, self-confi-
dence, and a realization of their potential both as individuals and as mem-
bers of a community.21
The DFA program also followed Freire in rejecting what he identified as the
banking method of learning, where authoritative teachers deposit chunks of
knowledge into passive student recipients. Instead, heand theyadvocated
a keyword approach in which participants learned phonetic letters in the con-
text of specific wordssuch as work (kam), water (pani) and liquor
(raksi)which would cause [student] participants to examine their own prac-
tices and consider changing them. As each keyword was introduced, class par-
ticipants were encouraged to discuss the ways in which these terms or practices
were issues in their own lives using comic strip stories about rural womens
everyday dilemmas and illustrations of people engaged in keyword-relatedactivities. The aim of the discussions was to promote collective reflection and
critical analysis of themes such as poverty, economic class and caste, environ-
mental degradation, gender bias and inequality, bribery, and corruption.22
As noted, the program ran for three years consecutively. It met two hours
per night five nights a week for six to eight months during the dry season. It
took place in the evening so that women could finish their work before they
came. Classes were held under trees, in public buildings or in lean-to huts
constructed for that purpose. Each facilitator, as NFE instructors were called,was given a packet of supplemental materials, a blackboard, and a kerosene
lamp as teaching equipment. Participants received textbooks, a notebook,
and one pencil each, in return for providing 25 paisa a month for kerosene
and a 5 rupee registration fee.23 The first person to arrive any evening was
expected to sweep out the space and/or cover it with fresh straw.
Despite a 30% drop out rate as a result of illness, marriage or death, the
program was highly successful. Five years after the completion of the course,
70% were still able to read and write their names.24 At the end of the program,
participants formed savings and loan groups, opened shops, and took up for-
mal positions as Community Health Volunteers. A few joined local develop-
ment committees, and 41% reported that they felt more confident speaking in
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public and/or asserting themselves. About a dozen girls joined the public
school system in class four. Now eighth, ninth, or tenth-class passed or study-
ing at the university level, they formed the first cohort of educated girls in
Chorigaon. Their mothers and sisters who studied at Adult Literacy Centers(ALC) also proved more disposed to send their other daughters to school. As a
result of this, along with government media messages promoting education,
changing aspirations and brute survival needs,25 most children of both sexes
attend school in Chorigaon todayor at least they did until the intensifica-
tion of the conflict, which has shut down, interrupted, and made parents fear-
ful to send their children to schools.
According to its creators, the Naya Goreto program was intended to serve
as a catalyst for development by exposing participants to new ideas and infor-
mation and by giving them a vision of what was possible.26 Did this catalyze a
vision of revolutionary transformation as well? There is reason to believe that
perhaps in some cases, it did. When I asked one woman about why people in
Chorigaon supported the insurrection, her answer was succinct: the Maoists
work for social justice (samajik nyaya). When I asked her if she remembered
when she first began to use that term and/or the ideals it expresses, she
thought for a moment and then replied: in the adult literacy course.This exchange would appear to suggest that the NFE experience did indeed
plant seeds that would later help to radicalize its participants. Yet, as the next
few sections of the paper will show, Manchandas thesis rests on specific
assumptions about development, empowerment, and revolutionary conscious-
ness that are not quite as suited to the situation as they may at first seem.
Underdevelopment as a Cause of Violence orDevelopment as a Violent Process? Empowerment
at USAID and in Theories of Conscientization
Before weighing in on what actually happened in Gorkha, we need to exam-
ine this and some other questions raised by the failed development thesis.
Scholarly understandings of the relationships between violence and develop-
ment have tended to fall into one of two broad perspectives. The firstwhich
is the dominant line of analysis in mainstream development agencies and
policy circlesrecognizes poverty and poverty-related despair as a powerful
threat to peace and stability. It therefore sees development, as a process that
works to alleviate that poverty, as decreasing the chance of violent uprisings.
According to this theory, failed or incomplete development is the cause of
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the conflict in Nepal (and many other parts of the world), and more, better
and farther-reaching interventions hold the promise of relief.
Against this, other scholars have advanced the claim that development itself
is a form of structural violencea neo-imperial enterprise through whichindustrialized Northern countries continue to dominate and exploit the so-
called Third World (Cowen 1995, Des Chene 1996, Esteva 1992, Rahnema and
Bawtree 1997, Sachs 1992). Anthropological studies along these lines have
denounced development as a governmental instrument that serves the interests
of transnational corporations against postcolonial peoples and states (Gupta
1998), charged that development discourse creates new, disempowering forms
of subjectivity like underdeveloped, illiterate and L.D.C. (Escobar 1995,
1996; Pigg 1992, 1997; Shrestha 1995), and deemed it an anti-politics
machine which disguises the deeply political nature of its work beneath a
seemingly objective technical-managerial discourse (Ferguson 1994). This is, of
course, an analysis that the Maoists share.27
Proponents of each position agree that the solution is to promote freedom,
but each works with a different idea of what freedom means.
For an example of how the first position plays out in practice, we need
only turn our eyes to Washington DC. In its FY2004 Congressional budget jus-tification, USAID cited the unequal distribution of developments benefits
between rural and urban areas as a key reason for agrarian support for the
Maoists and attributed this to a dysfunctional political system that perverts
development delivery:
Poor governance and corruption, [Nepals] forbidding terrain and lack
of infrastructure all contribute to its development gains being uneven-
ly distributed. The Maoist insurgencyhas found fertile groundlargely in response to Nepals poverty, exclusion, and poor governance.28
In response, the agency proposed programs that would increase national
wealth by promoting and rationalizing the hydropower and forest/agricultur-
al products sectors and expanding good governance to deepen democracy.
The integrating theme of these goals, as they put it, was better governance
for equitable growth.29
A White House paper released at the end of September 2002 specifies the
assumptions with which USAID was operating. It specifically linked democra-
cy and development to the freedom of the market, and also outlined the his-
toric role the United States sought to play in promoting neoliberal security:
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The great struggles of the twentieth century between liberty and totalitar-
ianism ended with a decisive victory for the forces of freedomand a sin-
gle sustainable model for national success: freedom, democracy and free
enterprise. In the 21st century, only nations that share a commitment toprotecting basic human rights and guaranteeing political and economic
freedom everywhere will be able to unleash the potential of their people
and assure their future prosperity. [The United States seeks] to create a
balance of power that favors human freedom: conditions in which all
nations and societies can choose for themselves the rewards and chal-
lenges of political and economic liberty. The United States will use this
moment of opportunity to extend the benefits of freedom across the
globe. We will actively work to bring the hope of democracy, develop-
ment, free markets and free trade to every corner of this world.30
In this model, the political and economic freedom guaranteed by democra-
cy is a critical part of the development effort because it empowers citizens to
choose, participate in, and benefit from free market policies, thereby increas-
ing standards of living and state security. Hence the importance of meeting
failed development with more developmentand of generousCongressional funding for USAID: By supporting efforts to resolve the Maoist
insurgency and addressing the underlying causes of poverty, inequality, and
poor governance in Nepal, the US is making an important contribution to
fighting terrorism, promoting regional stability, and lessening the likelihood
of a humanitarian crisis.31 Not surprisingly, the emerging ethnographic liter-
ature on state violence and the coercive underside of many cultures of
democracy does not figure into these calculations (cf. Hansen 1999, 2001;
Sluka 2000; Tambiah 1996; Warren 1993).Manchanda, on the other hand, is taking the opposite approach. She
assumes that it is unregulated capitalism itself that is fueling the revolt and
supporting the various forms of violence and exploitation that led up to it.
The program models that tend to emerge from this sort of analysis are, gen-
erally speaking, some variation on the kind of conscientization approach
described earlier. The underlying assumption here is that freedom is not
merely a matter of the multiplication of choice but the indispensable condi-
tion for the quest for human completion (Freire 1997/1970). Likewise, justice
is not seen as the natural byproduct of conditions in which all nations and
societies can choose for themselves the rewards and challenges of political
and economic liberty, but as the result of self-conscious human action to set
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things right. In this, at least, Freirean educators and Maoist rebels share the
same, essentially Marxian, assumptions about human nature.
In theory, the two positions couldnt be more different. In practice, howev-
er, they have had a remarkable tendency to slip into one another, as the short-lived history of the Womens Empowerment unit at USAID in Nepal reveals. In
1996, USAID-Nepal made Womens Empowerment a major agency goal. As
their congressional presentation explained:
The promotion of democracy through womens empowerment is a
USAID objective in Nepal. For democracy to be effective at the local
level, women must meet their basic needs and the needs of their fami-
lies. To organize the family through womens empowerment is to
organize society, and to democratize the family is to democratize socie-
ty. (Congressional Presentation 1998)32
The result was a huge woman-focused development offensive that enrolled
over 100,000 women in six or nine month literacy courses in one year alone.
Nearly 43,000 women were provided legal awareness and advocacy skills,
and the number of microcredit borrowers tripled between 1995 and 1996,reaching a total of 13,450.33 This combination of literacy, legal education, and
access to productive resources was proclaimed critical to improving
womens choices. And education came to be seen as a route to self-assertion
and economic agency:
[Our] literacy program is showing results beyond the acquisition of basic
literacy and numeracy skills: women take jobs which they could not get
while illiterate, thereby bringing more income into the household to sup-port their families; they feel more confident to participate in community
advocacy and user groups; and they seek additional training opportuni-
ties, such as legal and business literacy. (Congressional Presentation 1998)
It seems hard to believe that this neoliberal vision began as a Freirean ideal.
By the mid-nineties womens empowerment had become one of the most
loosely-used words in the development lexicon. It had, however, emerged in the
context of a very specific political and theoretical debate. Like the popular edu-
cators who designed Naya Goreto, the first womens empowerment activists
were inspired by Freires revolutionary pedagogy. They were frustrated, howev-
er, by his lack of attention to gender. If conscientization was a process by which
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people leave behind the status of objects to assume the status of historical
Subjectswhich sounds an awful lot like some of the more influential feminist
theories of the timeFreire nonetheless never raised the question ofgendered
power (1997:141, emphasis in original). Although he theorized subaltern subjec-tivity in terms of dependence, alienation and, dehumanization, Freires model
peasant remained sexually unmarked.
The term womens empowerment was born in the seventies when femi-
nist popular educators introduced theories of gendered power into the con-
scientization framework (Batliwala 1994). The concept became the focus of an
international movement that eventually mainstreamed the ideal and is wide-
ly considered to have been a success. Yet, Im skeptical that its earliest advo-
cates would recognize USAIDs literacy-law-and-loan agenda as a realization of
their ideal. (Nor, I suspect, would the liberal feminists at USAID acknowledge
Freires revolutionary Marxism as part of their intent.)
This shift, from the revolutionary empowerment ofsubaltern subjects to an
instrumental empowermentforcapitalist citizenship signifies a dramatic shift in
the development vision. 34 Vernica Shild (2000) has observed that the dis-
course of neoliberal modernization emphasizes an active relation to the mar-
ket, expressed on the part of citizens as the autonomous exercise of responsibil-ities, including economic self-reliance and political participation. The result,
she says, is a form of governmental rationality whereby citizens arecon-
ceivedand producedas empowered clients, who as individuals are viewed
as capable of enhancing their lives through judicious, responsible choices as
consumers of services and other goods. Because the cultural contents shaping
these neoliberal political subjects are none other than the liberal norms of the
marketplace, she refers to these subjects as market citizens (2000:276). I
believe this describes USAIDs program well. But from a Freirean perspective,the reduction of conscientization to consumer consciousness is a wholesale
reversal of their liberatory aim. For these educators, agency is not realized
through choices about what to buy, what to sell and how to vote. Empowerment
may beginby changing womens consciousness, but it should manifest
itself as a redistribution of power (Batliwala 1994). Far from a matter of free-
ing the market, in this model, justice follows from freeing the mind from the
self-negating subjectivity that patriarchal and capitalist exploitation create.
How does this kind of slippage become possible?
One reason is because, despite dramatic differences in understanding and
outlook, neoliberal and conscientization models share a number of unrecog-
nized assumptions. First, both perceive development as a unilinear progres-
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sion towards a predefined goal whereby developmental subjects become self-
conscious agents, whether they express that through economic activity and
disciplined participation in civil institutions or by seeking to overturn existing
hierarchies and remake society. Second, both conceive of empowerment as asubjective transformation that will lead to concrete forms of action that
reflect each models analysis of objective reality. Third, in each of these
models the developmental subject is imagined as in some way incomplete,
whether what is perceived as missing is access to credit or self-knowledge and
historical agency. Fourth, all of these ideas rest on the assumption that the
human subject is an essentially political or else economic being who is most
fully actualized at the moment of greatest autonomy. And finally, this histor-
ical agent (or developed modern citizen, depending on the discourse) is not
usually conceived as someone who lives in a gendered body, and thus is
implicitly maleeven in explicitly feminist analyses.
Some of these points have been criticized as common problems in post-
enlightenment political thought (cf. Butler 1992; Haraway 1992; Spivak 1988a,
1988b). What I wish to emphasize here is that they unite thinkers who would
otherwise be perceived as politically opposedand who would certainly not
acknowledge themselves as sharing foundational assumptions. Both theneoliberal and concientization models draw on a Hegelian legacy that looks
to the uniform unfolding of an autonomous human consciousness in the
direction of greater rationality, transcendence, and self-present Subjectivity.
Nor are they alone in these assumptions, which structure much of the litera-
ture on peasant consciousness and rural mobilization.35 In her critique of
peasant consciousness in the work of the Ranajit Guha (1983) and the early
Subaltern Studies collective, Gayatri Spivak suggests that, if the question of
female subaltern consciousness is a red herring, the question of subalternconsciousness as such must be judged a red herring as well (1988a:29).
And indeed it should be.
What we will see in the next section are a series of complex relations
between changing expectations and domestic reproduction, self-confidence
and critical consciousness, and self-knowledge and gendered agency in Nepali
social life that complicate theories that presume a teleological structure of
evolving political awareness culminating in an unfettered, ungendered,
autonomous (almost autochthonous) Humanity. The experiences and opin-
ions reported by NFE graduates demonstrate that the presumptions about
subaltern subjectivity embedded in all of the empowerment theories above
are critically out of synch with the women I met in Chorigaon.
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Empowerment and Agency in Chorigaon
So how did NFE participation affect consciousness and identity? In interviews
five and ten years after the conclusion of the program, women reported
effects identical to those of many other literacy course graduates in Nepal:greater confidence and increased self-esteem, less shyness interacting with
people outside of the family, and an expanded experience of womens ability
to succeed in traditionally male domains. Overall, participants testified to a
profound sense of individual and collective transformation. Statements such
as I became accustomed to speaking without feeling shy, Im able to
express what I think; I learned to speak and I learned many other new ideas,
although we had eyes we were blind before; our eyes were opened by the
ALC, and we came out into the light from the darkness in our own homes
may sound dramatic or poetic, but such responses were exceedingly common
(Leve 1993). Before, if daughters or daughters-in-law went to meetings and
spoke, people used to say that the hens were crowing, Geeta told me. But
now were allowed to speak in meetings.
Also, by 2002, almost everyone I spoke with noted that community opinion
had shifted to endorse treating sons and daughters equally.
After we began to become educated, we came to know that sons anddaughters are the same, Gyan Kumari told me. Before this only our broth-
ers studied, but now I know that women can study too.
Boys and girls are naturally equal; its society that makes a distinction
between them. They are equally able to do the same work, Ram Maya said.
As a result of these sentiments, participants attested, both sons and daugh-
ters are expected to go to school today; nor do parents discriminate in provid-
ing food or medical care. If daughters are educated as much as sons, then
they can also look after their parents, Kamala affirmed, adding that she cameto know this after joining the literacy class.
Given that the 24.5% female literacy rate in Gorkha is slightly higher than
the national average,36 and that people there credit literacy for womens
intensified involvement in public life, it is not hard to imagine that DFAs pro-
grams may have paved the way for women...to be drawn into the armed
struggle (Gautam, Banskota, and Manchanda 2003:120). But the social and
political subjectivities that women manifest are more complicated than the
theories above would suggest. While powerful development discourses have
indeed helped to extend modernist forms of thought throughout NepalPigg
(1992) and Ahearn (2001), for instance, have both illustrated how practices
and values associated with bikas have come to shape rural Nepali conscious-
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nessthe subjectivities that development produces are not the only identi-
ties that Nepali women perform.37 To the contrary, the women I spoke with in
Chorigaon conceive of themselves in quintessentially social terms, through
relations that are morally inflected, often entail labor obligations and aredeeply constitutive of personal identity. In fact, the forms of self-conscious-
ness that these subaltern subjects express makes me wonder whether the
utopian freedom of autonomous Subjectivity exists outside of the bourgeois
modernist imagination at all!
Let me start with Nani Maya. Nanu, as her friends call her, is in her late
twenties, the youngest of three brothers and four sisters from a middle-income
farming family. She is married with two young children, and she currently lives
with her husband, a sign-painter, in a crowded quarter of Kathmandu. Nani
Maya was in her early teens when she joined the literacy course. Shed never
been to school, although all of her brothers attended, and she dreamed of
studying even as she spent her days fetching water, collecting firewood, cutting
grass for the buffalo, and herding the goatsgendered labor on which her
household relied. When the adult literacy center opened, her parents consid-
ered it a waste of time; she was allowed to go only after her brothers inter-
vened and then only after finishing all her regular work. She remembers thatshed often arrive late to the class, hungry and tired. But she enjoyed studying,
and at the end of the course she won a scholarship from DFA to subsidize her
study at the village school. There, she passed classes four, five, and six in the
first divisiona major accomplishment for a village girl.
Even then, she recalled: I could hardly find the time [to study]. I was 15
years old and had three hours of class every morning and then more in the
afternoon. I used to have to finish half my [domestic] work before the class,
and the other half afterward. Somehow I convinced my parents of this sched-ule. There was no option but to work becausewe had lots of animals and
some land and my parents couldnt finish the work alone. Despite this, she
was committed to studying.
When she reached 18, however, her life changed. There was gossip of my
marriage, and this affected me a lot. In fact, she learned, her parents had
arranged to marry her to a much older, wealthy widower. I didnt want to
marry at that time, she explained. My plan was not to marry before [finish-
ing class ten and earning] the S.L.C. (school-leaving certificate):
But my parents were eager to unburden themselves of me. [They
believe that] parents can only go to heaven after death if their daugh-
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ters are married. Otherwise there is no chance of paradise. I protested
strongly. I didnt like that man! He was already married and widowed. I
was a virgin girl, and I wanted the same. Why should I marry a widow-
er who isnt well educated and has no personality? I asked myself.
Finally she learned that the marriage was immanent. The plan was to bring
her to a temple where the groom would apply vermillion powder (sindhur) to
the part of her hair and then take her homethe most minimal of wedding
rites. Her family was hiding this from her so she wouldnt resist. They had
effectively decided to marry her by force since she refused to accept the rela-
tionship otherwise.
In Nanus mind, this was a huge betrayal. And on the night before this was
to have taken place, she eloped with a boy she knew from school. Although
his family was poor, he was from the same caste and otherwise a socially
acceptable marriage partner. He had earned her respect by studying through
class ten and passing the difficult S.L.C. exam. And most importantly, she said,
he supported her dream: my husband loves me. He helped me a lot in my
study. He insists on the need for education. He said if I thought there could be
any future with him, he was ready to accept me. I ran away from my par-ents house for a better future.38
When I last met Nanu, we talked at length about the Maoist situation. She
hadnt been back to the village in three years. The last time shed been there,
when her husband had returned to see his father on his deathbed, the armed
police had mistaken him for a Maoist, which, understandably, terrified her.
I was at home cooking. Suddenly Kanchi came running in. Why are you
running inside? I asked. Then I looked up: there was a man with a gunstanding right at the door!
Is this Dil Kumars house? he asked. Then they searched the house
from top to bottom. They were from the armed police, and they asked
Wheres Dil Kumar? They shouted so loudly. (My) father-in-law had
been sleeping. The Maoist movement had just begun.
I said, Father-in-law is sick in bed. He (her husband) came from
Kathmandu to see his father who is critically ill. Hes gone with our baby
to play. Ill call him. But the police followed right behind me because
they suspected that I might help him run away.
[My husband] was at Kaila Bas house. After reaching there, the
police said, Come on, lets go. Who are youwhose son? How long
~
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have you been living in Kathmandu? Why did you come here? [My hus-
band] said, Ive been in Kathmandu for ten years, and I came here to
take my sick father (for treatment), but in vain. The police were furious.
When he said he was the only son they said, Youre lying. And when Isaid I lived in Kathmandu and not in the village, they said, Youre lying
too! Then Besar Mailas son intervened, and they beat him. Severely.
With their boots, like a football. Then after beating everyone there, they
were about to take my husband. He was carrying the baby, and he said
to them, Give the baby to her, to me.
Then I said (to the police), I told you earlier that our father is sick in
bed, and I showed you. Youre lying! Are we lying? Or are you lying?
Whatever you want to do to him, do it to me! And I came between
them so they couldnt hit my husband.
By then the old men had gathered. They told the police that [my hus-
band] is not like that (i.e., a Maoist). Who gave you such information?
Dont get angry. Hes not like that; we would have known if he were like
that, they all said. Then the police left, telling him to come to the
police post at eight oclock tomorrow morning. But when went the next
day, none of those armed police were there. Theyd already left, beatingsome tailors on the way. The Assistant Sub-Inspector said, This is the
first time that Ive heard this name (her husbands). We said, Theyve
already come to our home, and youre telling us this!
If they had taken him at that time, they wouldve killed him. It had
only been 15 days since the teacher, Gunanidhi Sirsuch a nice per-
sonhad been killed. Gunanidhi Sir had never gone for any meeting or
done anything. A person like that was taken from his bed and killed
near the river. His wife was asked to come the next day with his clothes.She went to the police post. Then when she asked, where is my hus-
band? they said, we dont know. When she got back to her home she
came to know from some cowherd boys who saw him lying dead. He
had been shot from behind. After that, she hasnt received any support
from anywhere. The Maoists didnt kill him, and the police deny it.
After all that, when I think of the village, I dont want to go. If
theyd taken him away at that time, they would have killed him.
Given such an experience, its hardly surprising that Nani Maya has lost
faith in the putatively democratic state. Or that she favors the Maoists, who,
with their promises of equality, justice, economic opportunity, and honest
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government, seem to offer something better. After democracy was declared in
1990, she told me, shed expected that there would be good facilities in the
village, that there would be justice, that working people would be free to do
their work, and that there wouldnt be suppression (daman) and exploitation(upayog) anymore. Instead, shes found, the opposite has happened:
Now the ones with power can do anythingAnd if anyone is doing good
work others try to drag them down (pull on their legs). There was
an idea that people would become free (swatantra) following democra-
cy but no such event has occurred.39
If the King could run the government properly then these problems
could be resolved. Or if the Maoists run the governmentthen people
who eat by doing their duty (kartavya)there would be no problem of
food and clothing for those who do their dutythe government would
take care of them. The rich are getting richer and the poor are getting
poorer. The poor are dying on every side. But if the conflict could be
resolved it wouldnt have to be like this.
This feeling, that democracy has made poor peoples lives more tenuousrather than increasing their security, was widely shared and widely condemned.
The phrase Ive translated as people who eat by doing their duty expresses the
understanding that social reproduction is hard work in rural Nepal. Nanus
meaning is that the people who have suffered the most under democracy are
those for whom eeking out a living requires painful labor (as opposed to those
who live having fun, as we will see below). If such people do as they must
as they are obliged in order to eatshe feels they should at least be able to feed
and clothe their families. Her word choice suggests a morally grounded critiqueof a democracy that further impoverishes people who struggle and suffer to sat-
isfy their most basic needs (and sends their children to die on both sides of the
conflict) while the ones with power can do anything.
Geeta, from a nearby village, expressed similar ideas. After multiparty
democracy was established, I thought, let there be development (bikas) in the
country. Let everyone get equal opportunity. But instead, development works
have stopped. Instead of building, they have destroyedbuildings, hospitals,
bridges, drinking water, electricity, and roads. So rather than development,
destruction has increased!
At another point in the conversation, she linked these expectations to val-
ues that she traced to the literacy course:
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After studying, women started to learn many things, that we too have
rights and that women have been dominated by men. [When democ-
racy came,] I had hoped for equality. But what sort of development do
we have now? The development is only in killings!
Perhaps because of experiences like Nani Mayas, most women told me
they blamed the government more than the Maoists for the violence that had
so completely transformed their lives. In part, this may have reflected a
greater fear of the Maoists who had eyes and ears in the villages in a way that
the security forces did not, such that criticism whispered in ones own kitchen
could bring retaliation in the middle of the night.40 However, I think it also
reflects their experiences of state violencewhich only increased since King
Gyanendra inherited the throne in June 2001 and released the army, intensi-
fying the warand a widespread sense that the government had betrayed
them. When asked what could be done to bring about peace, close to half the
women interviewed expressed their desire that the government would agree
to the Maoists 40 Point Demands. These include inheritance rights for
women, abolishing exploitation based on caste and ethnicity, special protec-
tions for orphans, disabled persons and the elderly, and the provision ofemployment opportunities for all, in addition to forgiving rural agricultural
debt, redistributing land to the tiller and other more familiar Marxist
demands (Karki and Seddon 2003b). Indeed, not a single person suggested
that the government should pursue a military victory. Rather, about 40% of
interviewees said in exactlyor very close tothese very words: the govern-
ment (sarkar) must fulfill the wishes (avasyakor mag) of the people (janata ).
Jamuna Devi was particularly adamant on this theme. Peoples oppression
and their struggles need to be recognized. Poor people should be on topand the ruling rich people should be lower. Only when there is justice for the
oppressed will the people have trust (bishvas) [in the state]. The government
must fulfill the Maoists demands.
Despite this clear support for the Maoist political and economic agenda,
her thoughts about gender varied considerably from rebel line. She gave
dowry (daijau) at her elder daughters marriage, she said, so that her daugh-
ter would be appreciated and not have to tolerate harsh words in her home.
But I felt very bad while giving it, she confessed. I gave him my daughter,
and I also gave property. Then I have no daughter to [share the] labor and no
property either, and Im left with nothing (as if naked), with both my daugh-
ter and my property gone!
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At the same time that she lamented the practice of giving dowry, however,
Jamuna was firm in her insistence on the menstrual taboos that bar women
from touching men, preparing food, or entering the house during that time.
I obey this rule very strictly because this is our womens custom. I will neverabandon this tradition, she said. When I pointed out that the rebels are said
to reject these observances and suggested that the practices may put women
at riskfor instance, a local woman had almost died after a tiger mauled her
while she was sleeping outdoors in front of her homeJamuna responded by
listing all the things that had changed:
In the past, we used to eat and wear whatever we were given, but nowa-
days girls want to eat good food and wear good clothes. A change has
come from knowing how to read and write. Husbands, mothers-in-laws,
parents are also human beings. We came to know that we didnt need
to treat them like gods41 only after the literacy class. [Similarly, we
now know] daughters may be able to study high and stand independ-
ently (swatantra) on their own feet. But this is our womens custom,
and I wont give it up.
There is clearly something about this ritual for Jamuna that indexes an essential
part of her feminine identity. I will return to this below. For now, suffice it to note
that even the most adamant supporters of economic justice dont necessarily
wish to do away with practices associated with gender identity, especially differ-
ences that they dont see as exploitative, but that mark the genders as distinct.
Let me conclude this section by introducing Bina, one of DFAs most dra-
matic success stories. Unschooled until she joined the literacy course as a
young teenager, she is now married (to a policeman), with a son and a daugh-ter, as well as a paying job of her own. Shes been working practically since
she left school. Before taking her current position at a police academy in
Kathmandu, she worked for the governments community health program in
her village, as an adult literacy instructor there, and, for two years, at the dis-
trict hospital. In the village, she was active in community development efforts
(president of her womens group, member of the forest committee and a
drinking water project group) and recognized as a local leader. Although
there were people who had passed the S.L.C. in that place, they used to see
me as someone who can speak, and whenever there was any problem in that
area they would call me, she explained. Theyd tell me that such and such a
fight has taken place, and then I had to go and resolve it.
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As the wife of a policeman and someone employed by a police academy
herself, Bina regrets that she cant return to the village nowadays:
When there was no conflict, I used to go to the village once a month. Ilove the village. I miss it a lot. I have so much to do there. Im living
here (in the city) only because I have to. Otherwise Id prefer to be there.
But although she fears for her life, she is sympathetic to the insurrection.
In our village, there are nine people in the police and the army. The
Maoists organized a mass meeting in the village, and they read out
these nine names. These people shouldnt serve in the police and
army, they said. Ask them to leave. Instead, tell us how much salary
they need; we will provide it. I came to know that they said that.
Otherwise, we know where they are and we will kill them.
What can we do? Its difficult. We have to educate our children. If
wed been well educated, we wouldnt be facing so much trouble (chin-
ta), would we? Who wouldnt want to live having fun (mojmajja)? No
one wants to face such pain (dukkha), do they?.... At night when wesleep in our room, if someone knocks on the door, we feel theyve come
to kill us. Thats the kind of fear we live with.
What they [the Maoists] are doing is good. Theyre doing it for us. Its
very good to say that rich and poor will be the same. Were scared
because they will kill us because of our jobs, and it shouldnt be like
that. We are doing these jobs because we have to. Otherwise, though,
theyre not bad. Actually, if police/army recruits die and if Maoists die,
its the sameall are sons and daughters of Nepal. But they arentfighting for personal benefit (afno sukha, phaida). Theyre fighting hop-
ing for something for the future of the country. Theyre fighting without
any salary, but were fighting for our personal benefit. In a way, were
selfish (svarthi). Because if we dont have a job, we wont be able to feed
our kids, so weve become involved. But they dont get a salary. Theyre
fighting knowing that they may die today or tomorrow. Were fighting
for our own self-interest, and theyre fighting for the country.
In these comments, Bina introduces two key oppositions that structure her
own and many other womens thought: self-interest verses being-for-others,
and pain and trouble (dukkha, chinta) verses ease and fun (sukha, mojmajja,).
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Kathryn March finds this second pattern among Tamang women in an area
she calls Stupahill. One of the most characteristic aspects of Tamang self-rep-
resentation, she writes, is that life stories are told as hanging in the balance
between dukka andsukha:
Dukka is suffering: it is the physical hurt of illness, hunger, cold, or
injury; it is the weight of knowing the fears, worries, wrongs, and obli-
gations of life; and it is the sorrow, sadness, melancholy, or grief at
being unable to forget hurt and hardship. Sukha is the opposite: it is the
ease and comfort of health, food, warmth, clothing, and companion-
ship; it is the feeling of uncomplicated pleasure; it is the purest as a
happiness unaware even of its own good fortune. Every women I inter-
viewed located her life overall, and the events in her own narrative, in
relation to dukka and sukha (March 2002:36 ).
Obviously anyone whos expected to wake every day before the cock crows,
gather grass for the buffalo and fodder for the hearth, and come home and
make tea before anyone else is out of bed is likely to agree that pleasure and
ease are preferable to work.42
But whereas the theories of empowerment thatI analyzed above pit consciousness against unconsciousness, agency against
alienation, Subjectivity against subalternity, and personal choice against
cultural constraint, Gorkhali women conceive the freedom and independence
(swatantra) that they aspire to in other terms. Based on my interviews, few of
Chorigaons neoliterate women would wish to live as new [wo]men in an
altogether new society (as Friere proposed) or to be completely autonomous
agents (with a world of choices at their fingertips). Instead, they ask for ease,
security, equality of opportunity (including access to education and employ-ment), good food and clothing, some degree of respect for their personal
desiresand, as much as possible, some fun.43 In fact, while the specific ritu-
als that Jamuna embraces as the embodied practices of womanhood (our
womens custom) are weakening, the idea that people become themselves
through gendered physical and emotional engagementsthat (social) prac-
tices make (social) peopleis not. While they would happily accept less work
and more fun, and might very well be content to have been born as a boy,
most of the women I know in Chorigaon would not choose to be disengen-
deredi.e., socially disembeddedindividuals at all.
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Gendered Personhood, Generic Humanity, and
Womens Suffering as Subjectivizing Force
Talal Asads thoughts on the origins of secular personhood are helpful in mak-
ing sense of all of this. Beginning from the reflection that modern projects donot hang together as an integrated totality, but that they do account for dis-
tinctive sensibilities, aesthetics [and] moralities, Asad suggests that what is dis-
tinctive about modernity as a historical epoch includes modernity as a political
economic project which mediates peoples identities, helps shape their sensi-
bilities and guarantees their experiences (2003:14, emphasis in original).
What, precisely, might these identities, sensibilities, and experiences be? Here,
Asad looks to the problem of the subject. Noting the historical shifts in concep-
tual grammar and material life that have made it possible for secular forms of
self and personhood to emerge, he observes that modernist thought presumes
an essential freedom or natural sovereignty to the human subject and that it
sees interests and desires as arising from this private internal space.
Characteristically, Asad links these ideas to powerin this case, theories that
posit power as external to the subjectand to a post-enlightenment historical
project whose aim is the increasing triumph of individual autonomy (2003:71).
He argues on this basis that the movement towards freedom from all coercivecontrol is rather, as Schild (2000) has already suggested, just another form of
subjectification: The paradox inadequately appreciated here is that the self to
be liberated from external control must be subjected to the control of a liberat-
ing self already and always free, aware, and in control of its own desires
(2003:73). Empowerment then becomes a metaphysical quality defining human
agency, its objective as well as its precondition (2003:79). Finally, he concludes
that cultural theoryand here I would include development models as well
tends to reduce [human subjectivity] to theidea of a conscious agent-subjecthaving both the capacity and the desire to move in a singular historical direction:
that of increasing self-empowerment and decreasing pain (2003:79).
These comments go some distance towards explaining the theoretical
assumptions that we encountered above. However, in reality, Asad argues, pain
is not simply a biologically-rooted experience that humans naturally and neces-
sarily wish to overcome. To the contrary, it is also shaped by and rooted in par-
ticular social contexts, some of which can make it profoundly meaningful:
what a subject experiences and howare themselves modes of living a
relationship. The ability to live such relationships over time transforms
pain from a passive experience into an active one and thus defines one
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of the ways of living sanely in the world. It does not follow, of course,
that one cannot or should not seek to reform the social relations one
inhabits, still less that pain is intrinsically a valuable thing. [But] the
progressive model of agency diverts attention away from our trying tounderstand how this is done in different traditions, because of the
assumption that the agent always seeks to overcome pain conceived as
object and state of passivity. (2003:84, emphasis in original)
In other words, as a social relationship, pain is more than something unpleas-
ant and external that impinges on someone. It is part of what creates the con-
ditions of action and experience (2003:85, italics mine). And indeed in some
cases, I would add, of self-realization.
Among women in Chorigaon, as throughout Nepal, certain types of pain
and suffering are unambiguously condemnedparticularly suffering caused
by other peoples irresponsibility, selfishness, thoughtlessness, or greed. But
in other situations, painful struggle is seen as a normal, even normative,
aspect of a womans life; indeed, it is through certain types of suffering that
the adult feminine subjectivity is produced.
For Nepali women, marriage is a socially, morally, and materially subjecti-fying event, an often dreaded but critical juncture at which pain and power
assert themselves in girls lives. Bennett records that her high caste Hindu
informants spoke of it as their dharma, a womens sacred duty (1983:174-5).44
And many ethnographers have observed that this forcible separation from the
comfort of their natal homes in order to join a household of strangers in the
least autonomous and most onerous domestic role is the defining experience
of Nepali womanhood (Des Chene 1998, Desjarlais 2003, McHugh 2001). Not
surprisingly under the circumstances, the event is paradigmatically describedas a transition fromsukha to suffering, from freedom to domination, indul-
gence to deprivation, easier tasks to harder work. In practice, of course, it is
not always this simple, and many women spoke of miserable childhoods
and/or happy married lives. But even in a Hindu-Buddhist religio-cultural set-
ting, where a generalized experience of suffering is posited as the last word
on human life, it is taken for granted that womens lives are especiallyfilled
with dukkha due to this dislocation and the pain of childbirth. This idea is not
limited by region or ethnic group: the notion that women suffer more than
men is pervasive throughout Nepal.
An important consequence of this is that women come to actualize them-
selves in the process of living these constraints. Suffering being common to all,
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it is the specifics of each womans experienceher chance to study or lack
thereof, the hunger she survived, the husband she was given, the children that
she lostthat defines her social persona and makes her life unique.45
Furthermore, its through the particular ways that each woman manages thedukkha she is dealt that individuals exercise agency. As Desjarlais notes in his
analysis of a Kisang Omus, a Yolmo womans, life history, the choices that a
women makes throughout her life will reflect on her, her siblings, her forebears,
and her descendents so there is tremendous pressure to act in culturally skill-
ful ways that indicate moral knowledge as well as individual creativity.
Our lives are like links in a chain, Kisang told Desjarlais (2003:136). After
marriage, after women grow up, we need to eat. So I needed to tend the
potatoes. I needed to do the work. Without work, we cannot eat. What to do?
Sorrow means that, it turns out (2003:114). This statement expresses exact-
ly what Nani Maya means by people who eat by doing their duty and links
this labor to other kinds of productive suffering. Appearing inside an extend-
ed discussion of her marriage and the pain of moving from her fathers home
to a faraway place, these words reflect on the ways that social, moral, and
material realities come together in the construction of female subjectivity.
Despite her unhappiness at discovering that her father had arranged hermarriage, Kisang emphasized that she didnt shame her family by refusing or
running away. And in this way, she says, she became herself: What to do
then? My elders sent me [in marriage]. Such is the fate of the daughters.
In that way, I became like this. Nevertheless, it became nice (2003:131,
emphasis added).
We can see similar patterns and sensibilities in the narratives of the women
from Chorigaon. I have already suggested that Nani Maya eloped only after
she judged her natal family to have betrayed their responsibilities to her byarranging to give her to a much older man in order to access his resources for
their own benefit rather than pairing her with an appropriate partner of her
own age. I would add that despite her unorthodox love marriage, she takes
her role as a daughter-in-law as a matter of pride, for which reason she stayed
on in the village to help her aging mother-in-law with the heavy work of car-
rying water, collecting firewood, and cutting grass long after her husband had
left to find wage work in the city. When she tells her life story, she relates it as
a narrative of suffering wherein she was wronged by her parents, her broth-
ers, and the societys expectations forand exploitation ofgirls and
women. But in her telling, she has always responded properly and responsi-
bly, the way a good girl/woman should.
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The sacrifices associated with marriage and adulthood prompted social
and ethical negotiations for Bina too:
In the hills, a daughter has to get married after she grows up. She hasto go to another home. I was fifteen/sixteen when I got married. I
may have forced [my parents] to let me study, but finally I was com-
pelled myself.
In our home, the tradition is that you get married before menstrua-
tion. If youre married before menstruation, its called kanyadan (the
gift of a virgin), and they say that [kanyadan is both a religious obliga-
tion and a meritorious act]. [I passed class seven living at my sisters
home, helping with her children and going to school] and I had already
begun my menstrual period. Then my younger brother, father, and
mother discussed it. I said, I will marry only after passing my S.L.C. But
my older brother said, No, you get married. Ill make them pledge to
allow you to stay here for two more years and complete your studies.
But you get married now.
She rejected this idea:
Its an impossible thing to study after getting married. You have to work
in the morning and at night after becoming a daughter-in-law. When
will you study? But my older brother forced me. You have to marry, he
said. If you wont marry now, then we wont send you to school. Do
what you like! they said.
The boy who had come to ask for me was doing his BA.... The boy
doesnt drink nor gamble and you have to marry him, was what myparents said. My older brother said if you dont marry that boy then Ill
never tell you to get married. Go wherever you want, and do whatever
you like! After he said that, I didnt stay with him. I came to
Kathmandu to stay with my younger brother. [But even in
Kathmandu], people kept coming to ask for me. My third sister had
come to know about her marriage only three or four days after it had
all been decided. At that time I had said if you give me like that Ill
never marry, which is why my parents consulted me. Actually, Im the
only one whos studied to class seven/eight in my familymy younger
brother only studied to class three/four. My parents said, She is edu-
cated and not like the other sisters. If she commits suicide, what will we
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do? So they asked for my permission because they feared I might com-
mit suicide. But I said no.
Despite this, she acknowledges, she ultimately had to submit:
But after I came to Kathmandu, I got married anyway. He is my broth-
ers wifes nieces son. People kept coming to my brother and asking for
his sisters hand. Then my brother said, Everyone is coming asking for
you. You have to marry one. Maybe my time had come. I couldnt say
no. I got married in Kathmandu, and after Id lived here for a year and
I had my daughter in my womb, I went back to the village. And life in
the village was fun (majja).
Fromsukha to dukkha to majja (and now, again, dukkha), these events illus-
trate Binas initial resistance to marriage and the life changes it would bring
as well as her eventual acceptance of what she now acknowledges was
inevitable (maybe my time had come).
One way to look at this story is to focus on the relations and identities that
come into play. At all points in the narrative, Bina is expected to get marriedand expected to marry someone her family proposed. From the religious logic
of kanyadan and the role daughters play in fulfilling their parents ritual obli-
gations to her older brothers declaration that he would no longer feel com-
pelled to feed, house, and support her if she persisted in resisting the family
will (If you dont marry that boy then Ill never tell you to get married. Go
wherever you like, and do whatever you want!), it is clear that her relatives
saw her marriage as a collective concern and not as a matter of (her) individ-
ual will. Given her education, her parents made some accommodation to herexceptional status (and perhaps, force of will). But no one assumed that her
life was hers to contract as she wished; ultimately, her only real option for
escaping familial power was the last resort of suicide.46
In evaluating this version of events, however, we must also take care to
read between the lines. For while Bina frames her story in terms of parental
pressure and personal resistance/accommodationwhich is the expected,
respectable way for women to narrate the events leading up to marriage in
Nepal47in fact, the family negotiated a compromise. Bina married within
the bounds of normative convention, and she returned to the village to live
with her mother-in-law. But she effectively selected her husband herself.
Moreover, when she chose her husband, she also chose her mother-in-law,
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the person whose support or disapproval would most immediately affect her
happiness or suffering for the next years of her life. When she says that she
married her brothers wifes nieces son, she indicates two things: one, that
he was from an appropriate marriage pool and acceptable to her family, andtwo, that she knew, or had reliable ways of getting information about his
mother. If shed married into a different household, they might have
demanded that she limit her activities and confine herself to the fields and
her homein which case her life in the village would surely have been a lot
less fun! Having accepted that marrying before completing her education
was simply unavoidable, she ultimately conformed. But she also found a
solution that would be bearable for her, allowing her to do what she liked to
do and actualize herself in a way she enjoyed while still being a respectable
wife and daughter-in-law.
When I was working at the Community Health Program, I went for a 15
day training. If Id been a daughter-in-law in another household then
people would have gossiped. I was the only daughter-in-law from the
area going there. But even when others used to say things, [my mother-
in-law] had no such feeling. In the village, it happens that there are peo-ple who were jealous that I was working. But if anyone said anything,
she would say well whats wrong? My sons okay with it, and Im okay
with it, so why are you concerned about it? She was very helpful.
Boys and girls would come to see me to talk about community affairs,
and she would come to the field to call me and stay there while I met
them at the house. She never thought, Whats this? My daughter-in-law
is sitting and talking with other boys!. If she hadnt been like that, I
wouldnt have come here. After attending the adult literacy classIve done it all.
Binas words sound like a resounding endorsement of the empowerment-
effects of the literacy course. Yet, although she showed remarkable skill in
negotiating a life for herself that is not too restrictive, her choices were made
in the face of powerful constraints. What would it mean to say that Bina was
empowered by her education? What would it mean to say that she was not?
These stories illustrate how certain kinds of suffering are part and parcel of
achieving particular forms o